1940–41 Gauliga Ostmark
The football championship in annexed Austria 1940/41, was held in the framework of Gauliga 17. The winner of the Gauliga may lead he had gained title as the Austrian league title. The master of the former Ostmark was also entitled to participate in the final competition to the German soccer championship.
- 2.1 The Final Teams
- 3.1 promotion round
- 3.2 1st class Vienna A
- 3.3 1st class Vienna B
- 3.4 Upper Danube 1st class
- 3.5 Salzburger 1st class
- 3.6 Lower Danube
- 3.7 Styrian 1st class
- 3.8 District League Tirol
- 3.9 Bezirksklasse Bodensee- Vorarlberg
Gauliga
Rapid Wien was Austrian champion for the second time in a row champion of Gauliga and the 14th time overall. Relegated from the Gauliga were the two bottom club SC Graz (Styria ) and Linzer ASK (Upper Danube ).
Scorer of the game season was Franz Binder Rapid with a total of 27 goals in 18 games.
The champion team of Rapid Wien
Climber
- SK Sturm Graz (Styria )
- Post SV Wien (Vienna)
German Championship
Rapid Vienna participated in the German championship as a representative of Gauliga. First, a group mode was held, with each winner of the four groups qualified for the semifinals. Rapid Wien was able to successfully put.
After a victory in the semifinals against the Dresdner SC Rapid was 04 German Champion on 22 June 1941 in front of almost 100,000 spectators at the Olympic Stadium in Berlin against FC Schalke. The decision was made in the final within 6 minutes when the Rapidler against FC Schalke 04 from the 62 to 67 minutes a seemingly hopeless 0:3 residue in a 4:3 guide transformed. A hat-trick, firing shots Franz Binder. Referee of this match was the Reinhardt Stuttgart.
The Final Teams
Second power stage
There was no standard second game stage. The master of Vienna's 1st class, the district classes or country classes of Styria, Lower Danube and Salzburg played in a little league system, the two climb places.
Promotion round
1st Class Vienna A
1st Class Vienna B
Upper Danube 1st class
Salzburg 1st class
Lower Danube
Information about a possible championship mode are not available. There are only known to the results of the semi-final or the final.
Styrian 1st class
County league Tirol
The Tyrolean clubs were not integrated into the Ostmark world of football, but played their championship in the county league of Tyrol. A rise in the Gauliga Ostmark was thus excluded from the outset. In the first years after the annexation, however, a rise of law was provided in the Gauliga Bavaria, from the most however was not utilized. The championship has been canceled and the FC Wacker Innsbruck declared the winner.
Bezirksklasse Bodensee-Vorarlberg
The Vorarlberg clubs were not integrated into the Ostmark world of football, but played together with clubs from the neighboring region of Lake Constance from their championship. A rise in the Gauliga Ostmark was thus excluded from the outset. However, the composition of the associations varied each year.
First Class ( hosted by the Lower Austrian Football Association ) in 1911/12 ∙ 1912/13 ∙ 1913/14 ∙ 1914/15 ∙ 1915/16 ∙ 1916/17 ∙ 1917/18 ∙ 1918/19 ∙ 1919/20 ∙ 1920/21 ∙ 1921/22 ∙ 1922/23,
First Class ( Vienna Football Association): 1923/24 ∙ 1924/25 ∙ 1925/26 ∙ 1926/27 ∙ 1927/28 ∙ 1928/29 ∙ 1929/30 ∙ 1930/31 ∙ 1931/32 ∙ 1932/33 ∙ 1933/34, ∙ 1934/35 ∙ 1935/36,
National Football League ( Vienna Football Association): 1936/37 ∙ 1937/38,
Gauliga ( NS time ): 1938/39 ∙ 1939/40 ∙ 1940/41 ∙ 1941/42 ∙ 1942/43 ∙ 1943/44 ∙ 1944/45,
League ( Vienna Football Association): 1945/46 ∙ 1946/47 ∙ 1947/48 ∙ 1948/49,
State League ( gesamtösterreichisch ): 1949/50 ∙ 1950/51 ∙ 1951/52 ∙ 1952/53 ∙ 1953/54 ∙ 1954/55 ∙ 1955/56 ∙ 1956/57 ∙ 1957/58 ∙ 1958/59 ∙ 1959/60 ∙ 1960 / 61 ∙ 1961/62 ∙ 1962/63 ∙ 1963/64 ∙ 1964/65
National League: 1965/66 ∙ 1966/67 ∙ 1967/68 ∙ 1968/69 ∙ 1969/70 ∙ 1970/71 ∙ 1971/72 ∙ 1972/73 ∙ 1973/74
Bundesliga: 1974/75 ∙ 1975/76 ∙ 1976/77 ∙ 1977/78 ∙ 1978/79 ∙ 1979/80 ∙ 1980/81 ∙ 1981/82 ∙ 1982/83 ∙ 1983/84 ∙ 1984/85 ∙ 1985/86 ∙ 1986/87 ∙ 1987/88 ∙ 1988/89 ∙ 1989/90 ∙ 1990/91 ∙ 1991/92 ∙ 1992/93 ∙ 1993/94 ∙ 1994/95 ∙ 1995/96 ∙ 1996/97 ∙ 1997/98 ∙ 1998 / 99 ∙ 1999/2000 ∙ 2000/ 01 ∙ 2001/ 02 ∙ 2002/ 03 ∙ 2003/ 04 ∙ 2004/ 05 ∙ 2005/ 06 ∙ 2006/ 07 ∙ 2007/ 08 ∙ 2008/ 09 ∙ 2009/10 ∙ 2010/11 ∙ 2011/12 ∙ 2012/13 ∙ 2013/14
- Football in 1940
- Football in 1941
- Austrian Football Championship
- Sport ( German Reich 1933 to 1945)
- Austria in the period of National Socialism